Through Past Life Regression, uncover the connections, loves, and bonds your soul as carried across centuries — including your soulmate.
If you’ve ever felt a deep connection with someone you’ve just met, or struggled with recurring emotions, fears, or patterns you can’t explain, the answers may lie beyond this lifetime. Past Life Regression is a guided hypnosis technique that allows you to access memories and experiences from your previous lives. Through this journey, you can uncover the root of emotional blocks, gain clarity around your relationships, and even reconnect with soulmates who’ve traveled through lifetimes with you. This isn’t just about curiosity, it’s about healing. By understanding your soul’s history, you can release what no longer serves you, embrace your true path, and begin to live with more freedom, love, and self-awareness.
Hypnotherapy helps you create lasting change, regain control, and live with clarity and confidence. It’s a safe, collaborative process where you remain fully aware and in control—the power to transform has always been within you.
Known as “America’s Hypnotherapist to the Stars,” Dr. Bruce E. Kaloski is an internationally recognized leader in hypnotherapy, motivational psychology, and personal transformation. With decades of experience and clients across sports, entertainment, and politics, he specializes in helping people achieve lasting behavioral change through conscious and subconscious reprogramming. As President of the American Board of Clinical & Medical Hypnotherapy and author of 17 books—including the bestseller Psych Yourself Slim—Dr. Kaloski continues to set the standard for excellence in modern hypnotherapy.
Dr. Kaloski takes a personalized approach to hypnotherapy, addressing each client’s unique goals through the integration of conscious and subconscious reprogramming. Using proven techniques, he helps clients overcome challenges like smoking, weight loss, anxiety, and stress—guiding them to access their inner strengths and create lasting, positive change. His compassionate, results-driven method empowers clients to achieve meaningful transformation and long-term success.
Hypnotherapy helps you create lasting change, regain control, and live with clarity and confidence. It’s a safe, collaborative process where you remain fully aware and in control—the power to transform has always been within you.
Meet Dr. Kaloski
Known as “America’s Hypnotherapist to the Stars,” Dr. Bruce E. Kaloski is an internationally recognized leader in hypnotherapy, motivational psychology, and personal transformation. With decades of experience and clients across sports, entertainment, and politics, he specializes in helping people achieve lasting behavioral change through conscious and subconscious reprogramming. As President of the American Board of Clinical & Medical Hypnotherapy and author of 17 books—including the bestseller Psych Yourself Slim—Dr. Kaloski continues to set the standard for excellence in modern hypnotherapy.
Dr. Kaloski takes a personalized approach to hypnotherapy, addressing each client’s unique goals through the integration of conscious and subconscious reprogramming. Using proven techniques, he helps clients overcome challenges like smoking, weight loss, anxiety, and stress—guiding them to access their inner strengths and create lasting, positive change. His compassionate, results-driven method empowers clients to achieve meaningful transformation and long-term success.
Hypnotherapy helps you create lasting change, regain control, and live with clarity and confidence. It’s a safe, collaborative process where you remain fully aware and in control—the power to transform has always been within you.
Known as “America’s Hypnotherapist to the Stars,” Dr. Bruce E. Kaloski is an internationally recognized leader in hypnotherapy, motivational psychology, and personal transformation. With decades of experience and clients across sports, entertainment, and politics, he specializes in helping people achieve lasting behavioral change through conscious and subconscious reprogramming. As President of the American Board of Clinical & Medical Hypnotherapy and author of 17 books—including the bestseller Psych Yourself Slim—Dr. Kaloski continues to set the standard for excellence in modern hypnotherapy.
Dr. Kaloski takes a personalized approach to hypnotherapy, addressing each client’s unique goals through the integration of conscious and subconscious reprogramming. Using proven techniques, he helps clients overcome challenges like smoking, weight loss, anxiety, and stress—guiding them to access their inner strengths and create lasting, positive change. His compassionate, results-driven method empowers clients to achieve meaningful transformation and long-term success.
Untrue.
Although some hypnotherapists traditionally use the term “sleep” or “deep asleep” when inducing and deepening the hypnotic state in their subjects, they do this in order to take advantage of the emotional connotations engendered by that term. But hypnosis is not sleep. The subject is aware of everything going on around them. Most people don’t recognize the state of hypnosis, expecting to become unconscious. Unless they are the one in ten who easily achieves the deep – or somnambulistic – level of hypnosis, this is not at all what the experience is like. This does not mean that they weren’t hypnotized. It simply means that they are experiencing a hypnotic level somewhere between a light and a medium state which, for purposes of behavior and habit modification, is generally more effective than deeper level hypnosis.
Although everyone experiences the hypnotic state differently, when asked to describe the physical feeling of hypnosis, many people who have experienced it liken it to the “twilight state.” This is the sensation experienced upon going to bed and/or awakening when one is neither fully awake nor fully asleep. It’s a peculiar frame of mind characterized by awareness of external physical stimuli, such as smells and sounds. Yet it also carries with it a certain listlessness, lethargy and disinclination to move or be disturbed until one is fully ready to awaken.
Most people base this erroneous assumption about hypnosis on stage acts. The truth is, those members of the audience volunteer to get up on the stage; so, they are volunteering to have fun. They willingly allow themselves to participate in silly suggestions. You cannot be made to quack like a duck or cluck like a chicken … unless you want to!
In truth, the more strong-willed, intelligent and imaginative an individual is the better subject he or she tends to be. Research indicates that while virtually everyone is capable of being hypnotized, those subjects with above average intelligence are the more readily hypnotizable. This is probably due to a greater capacity to concentrate and an ability to use their imagination.
This is one of the more absurd myths about hypnosis. If, for some reason, the subject chooses not to come out of hypnosis when instructed to do so, they will, in every case, do one of two things:
1) come out on their own in a very short time, or
2) fall into a normal sleep until they awaken naturally.
Contrary to popular belief, everyone can be hypnotized.
A hypnotized person is not asleep. They’re just exceptionally relaxed, intensely focused, aware and always in control.<br><br>Since, as we have seen, hypnosis is a naturally occurring phenomenon, which we all experience, there is no such thing as not being able to be hypnotized. Once an individual overcomes their initial apprehension through understanding the truth about hypnosis, it is an easy experience … one in which the subject will awaken feeling more relaxed, at ease and more positively motivated than before going into hypnosis.
Untrue.
Although some hypnotherapists traditionally use the term “sleep” or “deep asleep” when inducing and deepening the hypnotic state in their subjects, they do this in order to take advantage of the emotional connotations engendered by that term. But hypnosis is not sleep. The subject is aware of everything going on around them. Most people don’t recognize the state of hypnosis, expecting to become unconscious. Unless they are the one in ten who easily achieves the deep – or somnambulistic – level of hypnosis, this is not at all what the experience is like. This does not mean that they weren’t hypnotized. It simply means that they are experiencing a hypnotic level somewhere between a light and a medium state which, for purposes of behavior and habit modification, is generally more effective than deeper level hypnosis.
Although everyone experiences the hypnotic state differently, when asked to describe the physical feeling of hypnosis, many people who have experienced it liken it to the “twilight state.” This is the sensation experienced upon going to bed and/or awakening when one is neither fully awake nor fully asleep. It’s a peculiar frame of mind characterized by awareness of external physical stimuli, such as smells and sounds. Yet it also carries with it a certain listlessness, lethargy and disinclination to move or be disturbed until one is fully ready to awaken.
Most people base this erroneous assumption about hypnosis on stage acts. The truth is, those members of the audience volunteer to get up on the stage; so, they are volunteering to have fun. They willingly allow themselves to participate in silly suggestions. You cannot be made to quack like a duck or cluck like a chicken … unless you want to!
In truth, the more strong-willed, intelligent and imaginative an individual is the better subject he or she tends to be. Research indicates that while virtually everyone is capable of being hypnotized, those subjects with above average intelligence are the more readily hypnotizable. This is probably due to a greater capacity to concentrate and an ability to use their imagination.
This is one of the more absurd myths about hypnosis. If, for some reason, the subject chooses not to come out of hypnosis when instructed to do so, they will, in every case, do one of two things:
1) come out on their own in a very short time, or
2) fall into a normal sleep until they awaken naturally.
Contrary to popular belief, everyone can be hypnotized.
A hypnotized person is not asleep. They’re just exceptionally relaxed, intensely focused, aware and always in control. Since, as we have seen, hypnosis is a naturally occurring phenomenon, which we all experience, there is no such thing as not being able to be hypnotized. Once an individual overcomes their initial apprehension through understanding the truth about hypnosis, it is an easy experience … one in which the subject will awaken feeling more relaxed, at ease and more positively motivated than before going into hypnosis.
Watch Dr. Bruce Kaloski as he explores a range of hypnotherapy topics, offering insight, guidance, and real-world applications.